Once host Phil Keoghan (right) says the word GO!, Cowboy brothers Jet (left) and Cord (center) must search the UCLA Marching Band for members wearing the Chinese symbol for Guangzhou, their first destination, on CBS’ “The Amazing Race” in this file photo from 2013. This week, Jet and Cord McCoy finished the third leg of “The Amazing Race” in second place, utilizing some of their ranch ingenuity to help them along their path. They are one of eight teams remaining in the race around the world for $1 million.

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'The Amazing Race'

Ingenuity keeps Cowboys in 'Race'

Special to The Ada News

May 11, 2019

Once host Phil Keoghan (right) says the word GO!, Cowboy brothers Jet (left) and Cord (center) must search the UCLA Marching Band for members wearing the Chinese symbol for Guangzhou, their first destination, on CBS’ “The Amazing Race” in this file photo from 2013. This week, Jet and Cord McCoy finished the third leg of “The Amazing Race” in second place, utilizing some of their ranch ingenuity to help them along their path. They are one of eight teams remaining in the race around the world for $1 million.

Ranch work is equal parts animal care, land management and jack-of-all-trades Western engineering.

That experience came in handy for the McCoy brothers during the third episode of Season 24 of “The Amazing Race,” the CBS-TV reality series. The brothers put their ingenuity to work during the Sunday, March 9, telecast that featured the teams racing around Subah, Malaysia Borneo.

Jet and Cord McCoy began the show in sixth place as the teams began from Guangzhou, China, leaving six minutes behind second-leg winners Brendon Villegas and Rachel Reilly. That was important, since only the first six teams to the airport were to be boarded on the first flight, which provided a three-hour head start to twothirds of the nine teams remaining in the race.

Of course, The Cowboys hold the valuable Express Pass, their prize for winning the opening leg that enables them to skip a challenge along the race around the world for $1 million.

“We’re glad we’re the only ones to have an Express Pass,” Jet said.

The McCoys were awarded two Express Passes, but one was to be given to another team. They passed

it along to The Country Singers, Jennifer Wayne and Caroline Cutbirth, who used it in Leg 2.

Though Villegas and Reilly held the lead to begin the race, they weren’t among the first six teams to arrive at the Guangzhou airport and were forced to wait. That put them behind the eight-ball early, and the rest of the pack took advantage.

“Jet and I have been in that same position,” Cord said. You can be the “first ones to leave the mat, and the next thing you know, you’re standing there, and you’re last. That’s the kind of deal that you’ve got to pick yourself up and dust yourself off and catch back off.”

The Cowboys have done that during their three chances on “The Amazing Race.” On Sunday night’s episode, they maneuvered their way to the Kionsom Waterfall, where Cord, as the assigned teammate, had to find a gnome, then work his way through the rainforest and down the waterfall to obtain the next clue.

“Those cotton jeans are going to weigh 50 pounds by the time he gets done with this,” Jet said. “He’s going to be soaking wet.”

Cord was. In fact, he attracted a little more water than the other teams because he was forced to do the task twice; the clues were along the path down the waterfall.

“The clues were on my left, and I was looking over my right,” Cord said. “I skidded all the way down the rocks, and the next think I know is I’m in a pool of water and realize I don’t have the clue.”

The delay could’ve been troublesome for some, but the McCoys took it in stride.

“Cord having to redo this and having to go all the way back to the top … it cost us some time, but that’s alright,” Jet said. “We’ll make up some time somewhere.”

They did. In fact, it happened on the next

challenge, where teams were to build a bamboo raft at the Kampung Tempinahaton to tackle one of two assignments on the Detour. The brothers from the southeastern Oklahoma community of Tupelo were fourth at the river, but they scooted past the mother-son tandem of Margie O’Donnell and Luke Adams by utilizing jack-ofall- trades engineering to create the raft.

“Jet and I are kind of handymen around the ranch,” Cord said.

The other teams have noticed.

“Once the cowboys get on task, they are so fast,” O’Donnell said. “They blew us out of the water.”

Third in the water, the cowboys utilized the help of The Afghanamals, Leo Temory and Jamal Zadran, to complete the Detour. Several of the teams, like The Afghanamals and The Cowboys, opted to deliver goods, while others took part in a faux hunting task. For The McCoys, they guided their raft to a makeshift port to deliver food to a village chief, and Temory and Zadran helped the brothers to their destination,

though The Afghanamals were ahead of the brothers at that point.

The father-son tandem of Dave and Connor O’Leary were the first to arrive at all locations along the third leg of the race, but they passed their exit point off the river. They ended up hiking back to the village chief while carrying the groceries. They hiked back and beat the other teams to the end of the Detour.

That changed shortly after the teams returned to the river with their rafts. Temory and Zadran had trouble in the river, and their raft came apart in rough rapids. The McCoys, though, passed The Afghanamals on the water. That made the difference in the outcome of the second leg. The O’Learys won the leg, while the McCoys placed second. They were followed by Temory and Zadran. O’Donnell and Adams placed fourth.

YouTube hosts Joey Graceffa and Meghan Camarena were the last to finish and were eliminated.

ADA [ndash] Melvin Dale Haworth, 85, of Ada went to be with his Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ, Sunday, May 19, 2019, following a brief illness. A celebration of life service will be held at 10 a.m. Saturday at the First Baptist Church in Ada, with the Rev. Jerry Wells will officiate. Burial …

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